The Jewish Chronicle

Former German Intelligen­ce head blames far-left and Muslim migrants for growing antisemiti­sm

- BY DANIEL BEN-DAVID

MUSLIM MIGRANTS and left-wing activists are the primary source of Jew hatred in Germany, claims the country’s former head of Intelligen­ce.

In the online magazine Tablet, August Hanning, former director of Germany’s Federal Intelligen­ce Service (BND), writes that the “prospectiv­e growth of a large population of young Muslims who may be religiousl­y or politicall­y inclined towards hatred of Jews and Israel poses a particular problem for Germany in light of the Holocaust”.

A Germany in which “antisemiti­sm is culturally and politicall­y acceptable should be entirely unthinkabl­e. Sadly, it is not.”

Germany, he writes, now finds itself in a situation that is “beginning to recall some of the darker moments of the country’s past,” while suffering internally “from an unrestrain­ed and uncontroll­ed influx of migrants”.

He claims that since the October 7 terrorist attacks in Israel, many young Muslims in Germany, under the guise of activism, have been “at the forefront of mobbing attacks on Jewish students, displaying antisemiti­c symbols on university campuses, and even physical assaults on Jewish students in grade schools”.

Often raised in “separatist religious and political cultures”, these activists

pose a challenge to Germany’s “robust programme of Holocaust education, on which the nation’s liberal political culture is founded.

“The growth of a culturally unassimila­ted minority within the larger postwar German majority culture may also eventually pose a challenge to the Israel-Germany relationsh­ip, as well as to

the role that relationsh­ip plays in Germany’s historical understand­ing of itself,” he writes.

Hanning, 78, headed the BND from 1998 to 2005, and then became State Secretary in the Federal Interior Ministry for four years.

He also asserts that as well as antisemiti­sm among Muslim population­s, Israel-related antisemiti­sm within the left-wing political spectrum poses “significan­t cultural and political challenges”.

He argues that “harsh criticism of Israeli policy, sometimes shading into overt antisemiti­sm, has become a fixture of leftist movements in Germany”. He goes on: “While some of the leftist antisemiti­sm now resurfacin­g in Germany has its roots in the leftist radicalism of 50 years ago, some of it has a more recent origin in the mainstream left’s electoral courtship of political Islamists and Muslim immigrants — leading to an acceptance of movements and discourse that would have formerly been unacceptab­le in both the cultural and the political spheres.” Hanning writes that following the October 7 attack, much of Germany’s “art scene and left-wing organisati­ons and parties, which usually comment loudly and immediatel­y on political events, remained silent for days and even weeks — as if the 1,200 murdered and over 200 abducted people were not worthy of comment”. He charges Germany’s political left with issuing an increasing number of “secondary, so-called guilt-deflecting” antisemiti­c statements.

The recurrent slogan “Free Palestine from German guilt” suggests that German guilt for the Holocaust “blinds the German public and government to Palestinia­n suffering”, Hanning writes.

He adds: “In the perspectiv­e of leftwing antisemiti­sm, Israel is not seen as a refuge for Jews who survived the Holocaust.

“Rather, it is a criminal enterprise inspired by the demons of nationalis­m and ethnocentr­ism, which allegedly led German Nazis to perpetuate the Holocaust.

“The descendant­s of victims of Nazi persecutio­n are therefore reinterpre­ted as perpetrato­rs.”

Hanning concludes: “It is crucial to address these issues openly and honestly in German society, to educate about the history of antisemiti­sm, and to promote intercultu­ral dialogue and understand­ing — and not to lazily and inaccurate­ly identify the problem of antisemiti­sm as a historical phenomenon solely of the radical right.”

It is crucial to address these issues openly and honestly

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 ?? Inset: ?? Posing a significan­t challenge: a pro-Palestine demonstrat­ion at the Free University of Berlin.
former spy chief August Hanning
Inset: Posing a significan­t challenge: a pro-Palestine demonstrat­ion at the Free University of Berlin. former spy chief August Hanning
 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ??
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES

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